You know Boston Bruins star Brad Marchand by many names. The "Little Ball of Hate," which was a moniker first bestowed on Pat Verbeek but repurposed for a modern combination of talent and annoyance. He's been called a "Honey Badger" and "Squirrel." He embraced "Nose-Face Killah," a Wu-Tang Clan reference that also referenced his ample schnoz.

The veteran thrives playing a "playoff-style game" on a team full of skill, and he is a critical piece as Pittsburgh looks to get back into the series.

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But here's another name: heel.

He's Ric Flair. He's Chris Jericho. He's that quintessential combination of athleticism, verbosity and a willingness to win dirty that creates a character you love to hate, when you're not just outright hating him.

"I have done things that have stepped over that line, and I've paid the price for it. But you know what? There's a lot of people out there in the hockey world who love to say, 'Winning is everything. It's the only thing.' But do they really mean it? How far are they willing to go? Maybe it was my size, or just the way I was born, but I've always felt like you have to be willing to do anything -- literally anything -- in order to win. Even if that means being hated. Even if it means carrying around some baggage. If I played the game any other way, you absolutely would not know my name. You wouldn't care enough to hate me, because I wouldn't be in the NHL."

Oh, he's noticed -- for plays on the edge, over the edge and that frankly define the edge.

This was a curious one. Landeskog was given a match penalty for illegally hitting Marchand in the head and was later given a two-game suspension for it. Marchand responded to that hit with a gloved punch to the head of the Avalanche forward, for which he was given a $5,000 fine.

Marchand said after the game that he didn't consider Landeskog a dirty player. Said Landeskog: "Right away, like I said, I tried to let up, and then I tried to skate up and apologize and tell him I didn't mean to come across. And he ... obviously he wasn't hurt with that sucker punch. Like I said, I'm happy he didn't get hurt."

In a Game 7 (!) against the Montreal Canadiens, Carey Price froze the puck at the top of his crease to stop play. Marchand was skating toward him, stopped and created a spray of ice like he had a snow blower strapped to his calf. Marchand was given a penalty for unsportsmanlike conduct, much to Pierre McGuire's chagrin. As heel moves go, this is mild.

Taunting Matt Cooke is God's work, and Marchand did his service in the Bruins' Eastern Conference final against the Pittsburgh Penguins. He and Cooke exchanged pleasantries, and then Marchand scored on a wicked snipe.

How did he celebrate? By immediately searching out Cooke and calling to him, then saying, "What?! What?!" In other words, the best celebration.

This slew-foot on the then-Penguins defenseman was notable for having resulted in one of only seven career fights for Marchand. He was given a $2,500 fine for this slew-foot behind the goal. After the game, Marchand was ... contrite?

"It was a dangerous play and it was definitely a slew-foot," he told the gathered media. "Those are dangerous plays, and guys can get hurt like that. It's something I shouldn't have done, and they penalized me for it, and I'll move on now."

Marchand's equal when it comes to controversy and trash talk is "frenemy" P.K. Subban. When Subban was with the Canadiens, these two players battled on the regular, on and off the ice. That included in the dressing room, where Marchand would wage the war of words.

As in this March 2013 game: "Subban was asking me to fight. Three or four guys asked to fight him, and he's running scared," Marchand said of Subban. "But he comes after the smallest guy on the team. It just shows you what kind of character they have there."

Brassard, then with the Rangers, had established position as the two chased a loose puck to the corner. So Marchand did as Marchand does, which is kick out Brassard's leg from under him, causing Brassard to crash awkwardly into the boards.

"The way I fell on the ice, maybe I could have missed the rest of the season if I hurt my knee there," Brassard said. "Marchand's a pretty good player. He's feisty. He competes hard. But those kind of things we don't want in our game." Marchand was suspended two games.

13. Clotheslining Anthony Duclair (March 2018)

Yet another case of "this looked really bad, and it involved Brad Marchand, but nothing came of it," Marchand attempted to avoid Anthony Duclair of the Chicago Blackhawks -- and then ended up clotheslining him. Marchand was given a two-minute minor for interference. Duclair's season ended with a lower-body injury. There was no supplemental discipline.

"I think it was pretty dirty, to be honest with you. He did reach out to me after, but I'm out for the rest of the year. I don't know what's going to happen in the future. Hopefully I come back, but I thought it was pretty dirty," Duclair said.

This was early-era Marchand. Watching the then-rookie clip R.J. Umberger in the head with his elbow while Umberger had his back to Marchand -- for which Marchand wasn't penalized -- is like hearing "About a Girl" on Nirvana's "Bleach" for the first time: lacking profundity, but showing undeniable potential for grateness, er, greatness to come. Marchand was suspended two games.

"I had no idea. I didn't think it was that bad of a hit. At the time, there was no talk about it after the game, so initially, it couldn't have been that big of a deal," he said.

11. Laughing off diving fine (March 2018)

The NHL had warned Marchand earlier in the 2017-18 season about embellishment. Against the Penguins, Marchand appeared to trip over his own skates when Olli Maatta's stick got near them. The NHL decided this was worth a $2,000 fine.

Said Marchand: "That hit is very small and minor. It's the last thing I'm going to worry about. I don't care about this. It's a joke. It's a small amount of money and pretty stupid. But it is what it is." Marchand made $6.1 million in 2017-18.

This was, in hindsight, laughable. Marchand wasn't penalized, so when it came to supplemental discipline, a suspension was anticipated. Instead, Marchand was fined $10,000, the maximum allowed under the collective bargaining agreement, for sticking out his leg and hitting the back of an opponent's knee with "forechecking" that would have made the Hanson Brothers blush (and Billy Zabka proud).

"I think they might have given me a bit of a break," Marchand said, in an understatement. "The last thing I want to be doing is continually going back and being in front of those guys. ... I'm sure they're getting sick of seeing me." Well, yeah.

This was the end result of Brad Marchand's encounter with Jake Dotchin. Greg M. Cooper/USA TODAY Sports

Marchand and Dotchin were in front of the Tampa Bay net when Marchand decided to give him a swift cup-check with his stick blade. The Lightning defenseman crumpled to the ice, holding his bolts. He was still there when Marchand was ushered from the penalty box to the dressing room with a game misconduct.

8. Brad Marchand, Twitter troll

Social media would seem like fertile ground for one of the NHL's most renowned chirpers, and Marchand doesn't disappoint -- like making fun of someone's looks:

The only thing defenseless is your mouth with that huge hole between your teeth. You could eat a hot dog with your mouth closed

Borowiecki bumped Marchand to allow an Ottawa Senators teammate to carry the puck out of their zone. Marchand responded by sending Borowiecki skates-over-noggin, flipping him on his head with a (unpenalized, of course) clip. The NHL gave Marchand three games, as it was within an 18-month window of another suspension.

"It was simple play. I was trying to get to the puck carrier, and I turned up ice, and he was kind of standing there. I just turned up and tried to go after the puck carrier," Marchand explained.

This was the first game between the Bruins and the Canucks after their 2011 Stanley Cup Final, a seven-game series of abject brutality and melodrama that culminated with the city of Vancouver being looted and set on fire. Emotions were high.

They got higher when Marchand was hit solidly by defenseman Sami Salo. He retaliated with a few shoves before exacting revenge by flipping him along the boards with a low-bridge hit. Salo was concussed. Marchand was suspended for five games after receiving a five-minute major and a game misconduct in the game.

"It technically wasn't a clip," Marchand told ESPN in 2012. "Clipping is when you hit someone at the knees, and I did not hit him at the knees. Anyone that has seen the video will see that I hit him in the upper thigh under the buttocks." Got it.

This elbow to the head of New Jersey Devils forward Marcus Johansson resulted in a five-game suspension that carried through the NHL All-Star Game. Johansson called the hit "sad" and "stupid" after he recovered from his second concussion in three months.

Was five games enough for Marchand?

"Ah, not really, considering this was the ninth time he's been suspended or fined. Like I said, you hope that it doesn't come to him ending someone's career before it's enough," Johansson said.

4. Brad Marchand, All-Star villain

Marchand attended the NHL All-Star Game at Tampa Bay while suspended for giving Johansson a concussion and less than a year removed from spearing Dotchin in the nether region. Greeted with cascades of boos, Marchand responded by ... waving and blowing kisses to the audience.

And by posing with fans with derogatory signs.

And by feigning injury when he was tripped during the All-Star Game.

It was his Loki moment: Sure, he tried to enslave humanity with the Chitauri, but how can you stay angry when he's just so darn charming?

Brad Marchand relished playing the role of the ultimate heel at the 2018 All-Star Game in Tampa. Brian Babineau/NHLI via Getty Images

Marchand took on-ice taunting to disgusting new levels during his rivalry with the Toronto Maple Leafs' Leo Komarov. Like so many relationships, it began with a kiss on the cheek, earlier in the 2017-18 season. By the first round of the playoffs, their bond had grown to the point where Marchand appeared to lick Komarov's neck.

"I thought he wanted to cuddle. I just wanted to get close to him," said Marchand, who wasn't penalized on the play. "He keeps trying to get close to me. I don't know if he's got a thing for me or what. He's cute."

This incident sparked a wave of comedic internet memes, perhaps even more than when Alex Burrows ate Patrice Bergeron's finger that one time. Speaking of the Canucks:

The 2011 Stanley Cup Finals were, for my money, the single most brutal championship series in recent NHL history. Perhaps no moment better captured the Bruins' physical edge over the Canucks than in Game 6, when Marchand landed several punches to the face of Daniel Sedin before anyone intervened (in this case, the referee).

"No, he didn't say anything before. He was just right there. ... He didn't say anything; he was just kind of taking it," Marchand said of Sedin.

And why did Marchand keep punching him the face? "Because I felt like it."